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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,202 --> 00:00:03,871 may have ties to a dark past. 2 00:00:04,338 --> 00:00:06,673 -It appears some seriously horrific research was 3 00:00:06,673 --> 00:00:08,108 going on here. 4 00:00:08,775 --> 00:00:10,677 -This place is getting really creepy. 5 00:00:11,712 --> 00:00:15,048 [Narrator] A volatile Italian island conceals mysteries 6 00:00:15,048 --> 00:00:16,116 within its soil. 7 00:00:16,350 --> 00:00:19,119 -It’s actually one of the most active volcanoes on earth! 8 00:00:19,720 --> 00:00:21,154 -Now things get dramatic. 9 00:00:21,388 --> 00:00:23,724 [Narrator] A bizarre, abandoned Caribbean site 10 00:00:23,924 --> 00:00:25,692 may have infamous origins. 11 00:00:25,692 --> 00:00:28,262 -This is not a place you can navigate to with Google Maps, 12 00:00:28,729 --> 00:00:30,230 and it’s no easy journey. 13 00:00:30,430 --> 00:00:31,732 -What is it? 14 00:00:37,004 --> 00:00:38,038 [Narrator] Isolated. 15 00:00:38,272 --> 00:00:39,773 Scarce on resources. 16 00:00:40,040 --> 00:00:42,075 Islands are worlds unto themselves. 17 00:00:43,844 --> 00:00:45,512 Bizarre creatures. 18 00:00:46,046 --> 00:00:48,415 Ancient gods and haunting ruins. 19 00:00:49,716 --> 00:00:52,119 Baffling murders and deadly spirits. 20 00:00:52,920 --> 00:00:57,758 What will be discovered on Earth's mysterious islands? 21 00:01:13,941 --> 00:01:15,442 Straddling the border between 22 00:01:15,442 --> 00:01:18,378 Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan lies what remains 23 00:01:18,378 --> 00:01:20,480 of Vozrozhdeniya Island, 24 00:01:20,981 --> 00:01:23,317 a sliver of water to its west, 25 00:01:23,317 --> 00:01:25,152 what is left of the Aral Sea. 26 00:01:25,485 --> 00:01:27,020 -The Aral Sea derives its name from 27 00:01:27,020 --> 00:01:28,221 the Kyrgyz expression, 28 00:01:28,221 --> 00:01:31,558 Aral-denghiz, meaning “Sea of Islands,” but today, 29 00:01:32,059 --> 00:01:34,895 the Aral Sea boasts neither water nor islands. 30 00:01:36,530 --> 00:01:39,566 -The environment here doesn’t look or feel natural. 31 00:01:39,566 --> 00:01:41,902 It's strangely quiet, 32 00:01:41,902 --> 00:01:43,937 the only sound comes from the wind blowing 33 00:01:43,937 --> 00:01:45,639 across the desert flats. 34 00:01:47,608 --> 00:01:49,810 And like a desert, it doesn’t seem like anything 35 00:01:49,810 --> 00:01:51,678 actually lives here. 36 00:01:52,379 --> 00:01:54,314 -But it wasn’t always this way. 37 00:01:54,314 --> 00:01:57,517 Littering the landscape are the rusted-out hulks of ships 38 00:01:57,517 --> 00:01:59,252 and decaying piers, 39 00:01:59,252 --> 00:02:02,823 all pointing to a remarkably different time 40 00:02:02,823 --> 00:02:04,591 in the region's history. 41 00:02:04,925 --> 00:02:07,594 -This was when Vozrozhdeniya Island was, 42 00:02:07,594 --> 00:02:09,463 well, an island. 43 00:02:09,796 --> 00:02:12,332 So what happened between then and now? 44 00:02:13,233 --> 00:02:15,736 [Narrator] To the south of Vozrozhdeniya Island lies the 45 00:02:15,736 --> 00:02:19,539 Uzbek province of Karakalpakstan famous for its 46 00:02:19,740 --> 00:02:24,144 cotton, rice, and melon crops, all three of which play a vital 47 00:02:24,144 --> 00:02:25,746 role in its economy. 48 00:02:25,746 --> 00:02:27,814 -These crops are highly water intensive, 49 00:02:27,814 --> 00:02:30,050 especially cotton, it guzzles water. 50 00:02:30,050 --> 00:02:33,286 So it isn’t so surprising that they focused on these crops, 51 00:02:33,286 --> 00:02:35,188 considering that they had a bounty of freshwater 52 00:02:35,188 --> 00:02:36,790 right next door. 53 00:02:37,324 --> 00:02:38,525 [Narrator] In the 1960s, 54 00:02:38,525 --> 00:02:41,862 when Uzbekistan was still part of the Soviet Union, 55 00:02:41,862 --> 00:02:44,131 the decision was made to divert the two rivers 56 00:02:44,131 --> 00:02:46,967 flowing into the Aral Sea into irrigation canals 57 00:02:47,334 --> 00:02:49,369 feeding the surrounding desert. 58 00:02:49,770 --> 00:02:50,871 -By the 1980s, 59 00:02:50,871 --> 00:02:53,507 the two rivers were so depleted that during the summer, 60 00:02:53,507 --> 00:02:55,475 they no longer flowed into the lake. 61 00:02:56,209 --> 00:02:59,012 Then, as the lake’s water levels continued to drop, 62 00:02:59,012 --> 00:03:02,149 its salinity rose, making life unsustainable, 63 00:03:02,516 --> 00:03:05,852 killing off not just all the aquatic life, 64 00:03:06,186 --> 00:03:08,488 but also the communities that relied on it. 65 00:03:09,423 --> 00:03:12,459 -Not only did the remaining water in the Aral Sea become 66 00:03:12,459 --> 00:03:13,727 more salty, 67 00:03:13,727 --> 00:03:15,662 but endless amounts of pesticides 68 00:03:15,662 --> 00:03:17,931 and chemical fertilizer ran off into the 69 00:03:17,931 --> 00:03:20,100 lake into the surrounding lands, 70 00:03:20,100 --> 00:03:22,369 further poisoning the water and the soil, 71 00:03:22,369 --> 00:03:25,439 all of which was gradually becoming a toxic dust bowl. 72 00:03:26,206 --> 00:03:29,409 It’s so bad now that the region has one of the highest 73 00:03:29,409 --> 00:03:32,045 rates of infant mortality anywhere in the world. 74 00:03:32,779 --> 00:03:34,848 [Narrator] The Uzbek and Kazakh governments took 75 00:03:34,848 --> 00:03:37,050 over the management of the Aral Sea, 76 00:03:37,050 --> 00:03:40,053 but their policies couldn't reverse the damage done. 77 00:03:40,053 --> 00:03:41,588 -And so now what we have left of the Aral Sea are 78 00:03:41,588 --> 00:03:44,558 names like Vozrozhdeniya Island, 79 00:03:44,558 --> 00:03:47,127 although it’s now is no longer an island. 80 00:03:47,127 --> 00:03:50,564 It’s connected to the mainland via an exposed toxic lakebed. 81 00:03:51,998 --> 00:03:54,401 -This area is by definition a wasteland. 82 00:03:54,968 --> 00:03:56,837 To make it even more certain, 83 00:03:56,837 --> 00:03:59,673 there is a ghost town on the northeast side of the island. 84 00:04:00,941 --> 00:04:03,343 It's called Kantubek. 85 00:04:03,643 --> 00:04:06,279 [Narrator] In the town of Kantubek a yellow sign greets 86 00:04:06,279 --> 00:04:09,149 visitors with the National Anthem of the Soviet Union. 87 00:04:10,117 --> 00:04:12,786 -So, this place was deserted around the time of the collapse 88 00:04:12,786 --> 00:04:14,988 of the Soviet Union in late 1991. 89 00:04:16,490 --> 00:04:18,358 If the Kazakhs or Uzbeks had been using 90 00:04:18,358 --> 00:04:20,360 the island post-collapse, 91 00:04:20,360 --> 00:04:23,063 surely, they would have brought this sign down. 92 00:04:23,764 --> 00:04:26,399 So this must be a Soviet era ghost town, 93 00:04:27,033 --> 00:04:29,469 but what were they actually doing here? 94 00:04:30,303 --> 00:04:32,973 -Kantubek is defined by large buildings built next to 95 00:04:32,973 --> 00:04:35,008 what you could imagine were once very orderly, 96 00:04:35,008 --> 00:04:36,476 well-kept streets. 97 00:04:36,877 --> 00:04:39,246 Inside these buildings are apartments that don't seem as 98 00:04:39,246 --> 00:04:41,648 if they’ve been touched since the day their occupants left. 99 00:04:44,584 --> 00:04:47,120 -There are street signs giving parking directions and 100 00:04:47,120 --> 00:04:49,256 marking pedestrian crossings. 101 00:04:49,256 --> 00:04:51,925 There’s a soccer field, all of which has been completely 102 00:04:51,925 --> 00:04:54,294 unused since the collapse of the Soviet Union. 103 00:04:56,062 --> 00:04:57,364 -There's even a school, 104 00:04:57,364 --> 00:04:59,733 which means people were really living here, 105 00:05:00,000 --> 00:05:01,568 they weren't just stationed here, 106 00:05:01,568 --> 00:05:03,236 or forced to spend time here, 107 00:05:03,236 --> 00:05:04,804 they brought their families. 108 00:05:05,238 --> 00:05:08,742 So Kantubek was a permanent settlement on this island, 109 00:05:09,109 --> 00:05:10,944 a home for many people. 110 00:05:11,945 --> 00:05:15,382 -Oddly enough, it seems as though the people living here 111 00:05:15,382 --> 00:05:18,818 had some sort of ties to or need for the military. 112 00:05:21,421 --> 00:05:22,789 There are two 113 00:05:22,789 --> 00:05:25,792 Soviet-era T-52 tanks abandoned for years. 114 00:05:27,561 --> 00:05:28,962 [Narrator] During the Cold War, 115 00:05:28,962 --> 00:05:31,031 America’s foreign intelligence agency, 116 00:05:31,031 --> 00:05:34,367 the CIA, used its spy satellites to observe 117 00:05:34,367 --> 00:05:36,136 Soviet military installations, 118 00:05:36,703 --> 00:05:39,039 in order to assess their capabilities. 119 00:05:39,272 --> 00:05:42,842 -These satellites provided a whole trove of information, 120 00:05:42,842 --> 00:05:45,145 all of it analyzed by the CIA. 121 00:05:46,146 --> 00:05:49,282 And there are a number of disturbing reports from the 122 00:05:49,282 --> 00:05:53,153 1950s discussing the possibility that the Soviets 123 00:05:53,153 --> 00:05:55,655 were using Vozrozhdeniya Island 124 00:05:55,655 --> 00:05:57,390 for bioweapons testing! 125 00:05:58,058 --> 00:06:01,194 -Bioweapons, that’s when you take some horrific virus 126 00:06:01,194 --> 00:06:02,929 or disease and use a bomb, 127 00:06:02,929 --> 00:06:05,198 or some other delivery method to infect and kill 128 00:06:05,198 --> 00:06:06,566 an enemy population. 129 00:06:06,800 --> 00:06:09,135 But the CIA reports are pretty inconclusive. 130 00:06:10,170 --> 00:06:13,340 One from 1953 states that bioweapons testing was 131 00:06:13,340 --> 00:06:15,976 conducted there in 1936 and ‘37, 132 00:06:16,343 --> 00:06:18,144 but that they weren’t able to determine if it was 133 00:06:18,144 --> 00:06:19,746 still going on. 134 00:06:20,280 --> 00:06:22,015 -What appears to be certain though, 135 00:06:22,015 --> 00:06:24,384 is that some top-secret stuff was happening here, 136 00:06:24,951 --> 00:06:27,587 and the Soviet government didn’t want anyone to know who 137 00:06:27,587 --> 00:06:29,155 didn’t need to know! 138 00:06:29,890 --> 00:06:33,627 [Narrator] By 1962 the CIA concluded that this site had a 139 00:06:33,627 --> 00:06:35,095 military purpose. 140 00:06:35,295 --> 00:06:37,831 And the CIA report also referred to buildings about 141 00:06:37,831 --> 00:06:39,900 two miles south of Kantubek. 142 00:06:40,100 --> 00:06:42,736 -Now this area has an entirely different feel to it. 143 00:06:42,736 --> 00:06:44,671 You know how certain places just don’t feel right? 144 00:06:44,671 --> 00:06:46,606 Well this is one of those places. 145 00:06:47,407 --> 00:06:49,042 The first thing you notice when you approach one 146 00:06:49,042 --> 00:06:51,077 of the buildings is an off-putting smell, 147 00:06:51,077 --> 00:06:53,647 like that of a corrosive or toxic chemical just 148 00:06:53,647 --> 00:06:55,015 hanging in the air. 149 00:06:56,016 --> 00:06:58,551 -There are rusted out trucks, including an ambulance, 150 00:06:58,551 --> 00:07:00,353 all left to the elements. 151 00:07:00,353 --> 00:07:03,590 They’re all in the distinctive olive drab of the military. 152 00:07:03,590 --> 00:07:05,692 So it definitely corresponds with the CIA reports 153 00:07:06,059 --> 00:07:08,028 from the Cold War. 154 00:07:08,395 --> 00:07:12,399 -That being said, the personnel needed to use and maintain all 155 00:07:12,399 --> 00:07:16,136 the infrastructure on this island appears to be much more 156 00:07:16,136 --> 00:07:19,539 significant than some Soviet nuclear weapons bases, 157 00:07:20,240 --> 00:07:23,376 where they had on average 140 soldiers on each base. 158 00:07:25,512 --> 00:07:27,914 [Narrator] Close to one of the blockhouses is a building. 159 00:07:28,381 --> 00:07:30,950 one with stables and hundreds of metal cages 160 00:07:30,950 --> 00:07:32,519 piled into corners. 161 00:07:32,719 --> 00:07:34,521 -These cages are for holding animals, 162 00:07:34,521 --> 00:07:37,190 small ones like rabbits, and guinea pigs. 163 00:07:40,727 --> 00:07:43,396 [Narrator] Inside the blockhouse are long corridors 164 00:07:43,396 --> 00:07:45,398 with many darkened rooms. 165 00:07:45,398 --> 00:07:47,734 There’s debris and broken glass everywhere, 166 00:07:47,734 --> 00:07:51,004 and some rooms contain several dozen cages designed 167 00:07:51,004 --> 00:07:53,039 for holding primates. 168 00:07:53,039 --> 00:07:56,109 -There are big boxes with a single window. 169 00:07:56,109 --> 00:07:58,445 Several trays are inside each of them. 170 00:07:58,445 --> 00:08:01,715 These are probably fridges meant for storing samples like 171 00:08:01,715 --> 00:08:03,183 you would have in a laboratory. 172 00:08:05,185 --> 00:08:08,321 -Another room has fixtures coming down from the ceiling. 173 00:08:08,321 --> 00:08:11,091 They probably attached microscopes to the end of them. 174 00:08:11,091 --> 00:08:13,893 And there are also old vials and small bottles that likely 175 00:08:13,893 --> 00:08:16,429 had some form of solution or chemical inside them. 176 00:08:17,697 --> 00:08:19,366 -Even though the CIA’s report from 177 00:08:19,366 --> 00:08:21,334 60 odd years ago was inconclusive, 178 00:08:21,768 --> 00:08:23,937 this is starting to look more and more like a 179 00:08:23,937 --> 00:08:26,339 research lab for bioweapons. 180 00:08:26,806 --> 00:08:28,875 [Narrator] One room has a large chamber, 181 00:08:28,875 --> 00:08:31,978 on it there is a plaque with the year 1974, 182 00:08:32,645 --> 00:08:35,615 as well as characters written in the Cyrillic alphabet. 183 00:08:36,182 --> 00:08:38,051 -The Cyrillic letters listed next to the 184 00:08:38,051 --> 00:08:40,820 chamber type are 5K-NZh. 185 00:08:41,087 --> 00:08:43,690 These indicate that it’s a very specific model 186 00:08:43,690 --> 00:08:45,191 of protective chamber. 187 00:08:45,191 --> 00:08:46,893 The little holes are meant to put your hands through, 188 00:08:46,893 --> 00:08:48,361 and you would observe whatever it is you’re working 189 00:08:48,361 --> 00:08:50,196 on through the now broken glass. 190 00:08:50,997 --> 00:08:53,032 This chamber would have been intended for working 191 00:08:53,032 --> 00:08:54,567 with hazardous substances. 192 00:08:55,268 --> 00:08:57,737 -If you look at this contraption closely, 193 00:08:57,737 --> 00:08:59,873 you’ll see a universal symbol that 194 00:08:59,873 --> 00:09:02,242 indicates radioactive substances! 195 00:09:04,411 --> 00:09:05,745 [Narrator] A little further south from 196 00:09:05,745 --> 00:09:07,180 the research facility, 197 00:09:07,180 --> 00:09:10,116 an otherwise entirely vacant plot of land is 198 00:09:10,116 --> 00:09:12,719 punctuated by slabs of concrete with 199 00:09:12,719 --> 00:09:13,987 curved metal posts. 200 00:09:14,587 --> 00:09:17,390 -These are posts you would use to hitch animals to. 201 00:09:17,390 --> 00:09:20,160 So the animals next to the research lab were probably led 202 00:09:20,160 --> 00:09:21,694 here and tied to these posts. 203 00:09:23,596 --> 00:09:25,131 -This reminds me of something similar that 204 00:09:25,131 --> 00:09:26,666 took place on Gruinard Island, 205 00:09:26,666 --> 00:09:29,135 an uninhabited island off the west coast of Scotland. 206 00:09:31,638 --> 00:09:33,907 [Narrator] During the Second World War, 207 00:09:33,907 --> 00:09:36,209 the British and Americans were testing anthrax on 208 00:09:36,209 --> 00:09:38,778 animals to determine how effective it would be 209 00:09:38,778 --> 00:09:40,780 as a weapon used against the enemy. 210 00:09:41,514 --> 00:09:43,483 To prevent the animals from running away, 211 00:09:43,483 --> 00:09:45,985 they would fix them to post-drilled 212 00:09:45,985 --> 00:09:47,687 into the ground. 213 00:09:48,688 --> 00:09:51,691 -Anthrax is a particularly nasty infectious disease that's 214 00:09:51,691 --> 00:09:54,060 caused by the bacteria Bacillus Anthracis. 215 00:09:54,794 --> 00:09:57,330 It exists naturally in soil, however, 216 00:09:57,330 --> 00:09:59,399 when harnessed for such malicious purposes it 217 00:09:59,399 --> 00:10:01,301 can be extremely deadly. 218 00:10:01,301 --> 00:10:03,803 If anthrax spores are inhaled and left untreated, 219 00:10:03,803 --> 00:10:07,307 they can lead to death in 85 to 90% of human cases. 220 00:10:08,608 --> 00:10:09,909 Needless to say, 221 00:10:09,909 --> 00:10:12,312 the animals on Gruinard also met the same fate. 222 00:10:14,414 --> 00:10:17,350 -That use of animal testing is remarkably similar 223 00:10:17,350 --> 00:10:19,919 to the evidence we have seen here on 224 00:10:19,919 --> 00:10:21,554 Vozrozhdeniya Island. 225 00:10:22,789 --> 00:10:23,957 During the Cold War, 226 00:10:23,957 --> 00:10:26,092 the West and the Soviets indulged in 227 00:10:26,092 --> 00:10:29,596 this collective madness of striving to create the most 228 00:10:29,596 --> 00:10:31,698 efficient and destructive weapon. 229 00:10:32,899 --> 00:10:34,801 So was this island the ground zero 230 00:10:34,801 --> 00:10:36,536 for this effort? 231 00:10:37,303 --> 00:10:38,905 [Narrator] In the research building, 232 00:10:38,905 --> 00:10:41,541 down the eerie, darkened halls is a thick, 233 00:10:41,541 --> 00:10:44,577 metal door that greets all those who dare to enter. 234 00:10:45,478 --> 00:10:49,048 Although now it stands ajar allowing anyone curious enough 235 00:10:49,048 --> 00:10:51,451 to step into the room beyond. 236 00:10:51,451 --> 00:10:54,787 It bears a warning that whatever is inside is something 237 00:10:54,787 --> 00:10:57,056 dangerous and meant to be kept from getting out! 238 00:10:59,492 --> 00:11:00,994 -Just being here is bad enough, 239 00:11:00,994 --> 00:11:02,929 but that symbol you see on the front of the door, 240 00:11:02,929 --> 00:11:04,464 in dark yellow. 241 00:11:04,464 --> 00:11:06,399 That's the symbol for biological weapons. 242 00:11:07,233 --> 00:11:09,369 In a way it's similar to the radioactive symbol 243 00:11:09,369 --> 00:11:10,637 we saw earlier, 244 00:11:10,637 --> 00:11:12,405 but its shape is quite distinct. 245 00:11:13,973 --> 00:11:16,209 -It appears some seriously horrific research 246 00:11:16,209 --> 00:11:17,677 was going on here, 247 00:11:17,911 --> 00:11:19,979 and that the Soviets were testing whatever horrible 248 00:11:19,979 --> 00:11:22,849 biological agents they came up with on these animals. 249 00:11:23,716 --> 00:11:26,319 The cruelty and suffering is impossible to quantify. 250 00:11:27,420 --> 00:11:30,690 -The abandoned tank at the research site was likely used 251 00:11:30,690 --> 00:11:33,660 during these tests to simulate the effect on troops 252 00:11:33,893 --> 00:11:36,596 inside the tank when a bomb containing one of 253 00:11:36,596 --> 00:11:38,097 these pathogens went off. 254 00:11:38,765 --> 00:11:41,334 Considering its location as well as what 255 00:11:41,334 --> 00:11:42,869 was being done here, 256 00:11:42,869 --> 00:11:46,272 there is only one thing this place could be, Aralsk-7. 257 00:11:47,507 --> 00:11:50,543 [Narrator] Aralsk-7 was the Soviet Union’s preeminent 258 00:11:50,543 --> 00:11:53,046 biological weapons testing site, 259 00:11:53,046 --> 00:11:55,181 where final tests were conducted before 260 00:11:55,181 --> 00:11:57,684 the weapons were greenlit. 261 00:11:57,684 --> 00:12:00,620 -It was here where they genetically modify some of 262 00:12:00,620 --> 00:12:03,156 these diseases so that they were resistant to antibiotics, 263 00:12:04,691 --> 00:12:07,860 making them, of course, even more deadly. 264 00:12:07,860 --> 00:12:10,330 The goal was to see how effective they would 265 00:12:10,330 --> 00:12:12,165 be in times of war. 266 00:12:13,633 --> 00:12:16,236 [Narrator] Vozrozhdeniya Island was initially chosen 267 00:12:16,236 --> 00:12:18,137 as a test site because it was considered 268 00:12:18,137 --> 00:12:20,840 isolated enough from the mainland to protect 269 00:12:20,840 --> 00:12:22,742 the civilian population. 270 00:12:22,742 --> 00:12:25,812 The Soviets were successful in their research so much 271 00:12:25,812 --> 00:12:29,649 so that they managed to put a price on murder. 272 00:12:30,049 --> 00:12:31,317 -In their experiments, 273 00:12:31,317 --> 00:12:33,186 they calculated how much it would cost 274 00:12:33,186 --> 00:12:36,089 to kill half the population residing in about 275 00:12:36,089 --> 00:12:37,824 a half-square mile area, 276 00:12:37,824 --> 00:12:39,192 they concluded that it would cost 277 00:12:39,192 --> 00:12:41,661 $2,000 to do so with normal bombs, 278 00:12:41,894 --> 00:12:43,630 $800 with a nuke, 279 00:12:43,630 --> 00:12:45,965 and only $1 with a biological weapon. 280 00:12:46,532 --> 00:12:48,001 So in the event of war, 281 00:12:48,001 --> 00:12:50,270 you can guess which option governments and 282 00:12:50,270 --> 00:12:52,005 militaries might choose. 283 00:12:52,572 --> 00:12:54,707 -After the collapse of the Soviet Union, 284 00:12:54,707 --> 00:12:57,810 Vozrozhdeniya was abandoned by the scientists and soldiers 285 00:12:57,810 --> 00:13:00,146 who presided over these nightmare trials. 286 00:13:00,847 --> 00:13:02,081 They went home, 287 00:13:02,081 --> 00:13:03,850 but a poisoned legacy remained. 288 00:13:05,351 --> 00:13:07,787 -Essentially one toxic wasteland appeared 289 00:13:07,787 --> 00:13:08,955 within another, 290 00:13:08,955 --> 00:13:11,424 and it had disastrous long-term consequences for the 291 00:13:11,424 --> 00:13:14,527 animals and people who call this region home. 292 00:13:16,763 --> 00:13:19,098 [Narrator] The destruction of the Aral Sea is a testament 293 00:13:19,098 --> 00:13:21,267 to the folly of human ambition. 294 00:13:21,601 --> 00:13:24,237 While Vozrozhdeniya Island represents the levels of 295 00:13:24,237 --> 00:13:27,607 cruelty and short-sightedness that characterizes 296 00:13:27,607 --> 00:13:29,809 the human thirst for power. 297 00:13:44,724 --> 00:13:47,026 Off the coast of mainland Italy lies the 298 00:13:47,026 --> 00:13:49,529 Aeolian Archipelago, a chain of seven, 299 00:13:49,529 --> 00:13:53,066 main volcanic islands that stretch out in a large Y shape. 300 00:13:53,833 --> 00:13:56,269 An hour from Sicily, the islands run north through the 301 00:13:56,269 --> 00:13:59,505 deep crystal blue waters of the Tyrrhenian Sea. 302 00:14:00,039 --> 00:14:01,941 -This archipelago has been formed by consistent 303 00:14:01,941 --> 00:14:04,110 underwater volcanic activity. 304 00:14:04,377 --> 00:14:06,212 It’s what’s called a volcanic arch. 305 00:14:06,546 --> 00:14:09,148 Over the course of hundreds of thousands of years, 306 00:14:09,148 --> 00:14:12,418 lava bubbling up from the bottom of the sea piles up 307 00:14:12,418 --> 00:14:16,222 enough to eventually form these beautiful, cone shaped islands. 308 00:14:20,426 --> 00:14:23,362 -So for this reason the region is a hotbed of volcanic 309 00:14:23,362 --> 00:14:26,532 activity and no more so than on Stromboli, 310 00:14:26,933 --> 00:14:28,901 the easternmost of the Aeolian islands. 311 00:14:29,502 --> 00:14:32,171 Stromboli is famous for its temperamental volcano, 312 00:14:32,171 --> 00:14:33,940 which is consistently erupting. 313 00:14:34,240 --> 00:14:36,042 -So, the island has been given a nickname, 314 00:14:36,042 --> 00:14:37,877 “the Lighthouse of the Mediterranean.” 315 00:14:38,745 --> 00:14:40,079 This is because you can see the 316 00:14:40,079 --> 00:14:42,815 3,000-foot volcano illuminating the night 317 00:14:42,815 --> 00:14:44,584 sky on a regular basis. 318 00:14:45,885 --> 00:14:48,388 [Susan Leonard] Stromboli is an exceptionally beautiful place. 319 00:14:48,388 --> 00:14:51,090 The Tyrrhenian Sea is warm and blue, 320 00:14:51,090 --> 00:14:52,992 and the volcanic soil is fertile, 321 00:14:52,992 --> 00:14:54,527 the climate is mild. 322 00:14:54,527 --> 00:14:56,462 But despite the idyllic setting, 323 00:14:56,462 --> 00:14:58,398 the few hundred people who do live here do so 324 00:14:58,398 --> 00:15:00,066 under the permission of the volcano. 325 00:15:02,201 --> 00:15:03,970 [Narrator] At the northeast end of the island, 326 00:15:03,970 --> 00:15:05,905 where the steep volcanic terrain gives way 327 00:15:05,905 --> 00:15:07,907 to relatively flat ground, 328 00:15:07,907 --> 00:15:10,476 lives a small population of around 500 people. 329 00:15:12,445 --> 00:15:14,847 It’s here where a volcanologist is digging a 330 00:15:14,847 --> 00:15:16,916 few feet into the earth. 331 00:15:20,186 --> 00:15:22,722 -Almost 500 feet inland from the shore and about 332 00:15:22,722 --> 00:15:25,024 three feet below the surface 333 00:15:25,024 --> 00:15:27,827 he finds highly rounded pebbles mixed with 334 00:15:27,827 --> 00:15:29,595 dark loose sand. 335 00:15:29,862 --> 00:15:32,832 -They are found directly above a layer of volcanic ash. 336 00:15:32,832 --> 00:15:35,201 So could it be that the volcano’s eruption 337 00:15:35,201 --> 00:15:36,736 triggered a tsunami? 338 00:15:37,170 --> 00:15:40,339 The pebbles and sand this far from the shore certainly 339 00:15:40,339 --> 00:15:42,208 indicate that this could be the case. 340 00:15:44,343 --> 00:15:46,212 -This volcano erupts all the time. 341 00:15:46,212 --> 00:15:48,848 In fact, it erupted in August 2023, 342 00:15:48,848 --> 00:15:50,216 and that was a small one, 343 00:15:50,216 --> 00:15:53,019 because in 2019 there was this sudden explosion 344 00:15:53,019 --> 00:15:56,255 that sent burning rock and ash flying all across Stromboli. 345 00:15:56,956 --> 00:15:59,358 It killed one person and it injured several others. 346 00:16:01,460 --> 00:16:04,363 [Narrator] A few weeks after this initial eruption in 2019, 347 00:16:04,630 --> 00:16:06,933 the volcano erupted again. 348 00:16:07,166 --> 00:16:09,535 This time lava was sent flowing down what is known as 349 00:16:09,535 --> 00:16:13,272 the Sciara del Fuoco, meaning the Stream of Fire. 350 00:16:13,873 --> 00:16:16,142 It’s a trough gouged out of the northwest side 351 00:16:16,142 --> 00:16:17,443 of the island, 352 00:16:17,443 --> 00:16:19,045 where lava has been flowing into the 353 00:16:19,045 --> 00:16:20,713 sea for centuries. 354 00:16:20,713 --> 00:16:23,616 -This second eruption created a tsunami that luckily 355 00:16:23,616 --> 00:16:25,751 didn't cause any harm. 356 00:16:25,751 --> 00:16:28,454 But the volcano is obviously causing some serious changes to 357 00:16:28,454 --> 00:16:31,524 the island’s topography and the geological makeup 358 00:16:31,524 --> 00:16:33,125 of the landscape. 359 00:16:35,595 --> 00:16:37,597 [Narrator] To solve the historical mystery posed 360 00:16:37,597 --> 00:16:39,799 by the layers of sand and rounded pebbles, 361 00:16:40,466 --> 00:16:43,202 a team of experts continues to excavate the site. 362 00:16:44,971 --> 00:16:47,373 -Starting at around four and a half feet below the surface, 363 00:16:47,373 --> 00:16:49,842 they find this pink layer that’s totally different from 364 00:16:49,842 --> 00:16:51,310 everything above it. 365 00:16:51,611 --> 00:16:53,880 This first pink layer is actually fine ash, 366 00:16:54,447 --> 00:16:56,482 probably from a volcanic eruption, 367 00:16:56,682 --> 00:16:58,484 and near the bottom of the trough, 368 00:16:58,484 --> 00:17:00,686 there is another layer of ash that’s grey. 369 00:17:01,754 --> 00:17:05,124 -Above this layer is a bed of black sand, beach pebbles, 370 00:17:05,124 --> 00:17:07,226 and even the remains of ceramic tiles. 371 00:17:07,460 --> 00:17:08,928 But considering that the excavation is a 372 00:17:08,928 --> 00:17:10,830 few hundred feet from the sea, 373 00:17:10,830 --> 00:17:12,698 it makes little sense that you'd have 374 00:17:12,698 --> 00:17:15,401 beach pebbles lying here, unless of course, 375 00:17:15,401 --> 00:17:17,203 they were carried here by water. 376 00:17:18,170 --> 00:17:20,640 -If a tsunami were to have hit the island, 377 00:17:20,640 --> 00:17:22,375 it would have been way bigger than the 378 00:17:22,375 --> 00:17:24,076 little one from 2019, 379 00:17:24,443 --> 00:17:26,679 which didn’t really cause any damage. 380 00:17:28,714 --> 00:17:31,050 [Narrator] The beach pebbles and black sand are a sign that 381 00:17:31,050 --> 00:17:33,452 a significant tsunami event occurred on the 382 00:17:33,452 --> 00:17:35,187 island of Stromboli. 383 00:17:35,421 --> 00:17:36,956 But it wasn’t just one. 384 00:17:36,956 --> 00:17:39,258 Above the deepest layer of ash and beach pebbles 385 00:17:39,258 --> 00:17:42,428 lies several other layers of the same materials, 386 00:17:42,428 --> 00:17:44,564 meaning that several tsunami events would have 387 00:17:44,564 --> 00:17:46,832 also occurred many years after the first one. 388 00:17:48,100 --> 00:17:49,302 -Beneath the deepest layers of ash, 389 00:17:49,302 --> 00:17:51,804 and amongst the shallower layers, are charcoal deposits. 390 00:17:52,672 --> 00:17:55,041 Now this is a really important find because charcoal 391 00:17:55,041 --> 00:17:56,842 can be dated. 392 00:17:57,743 --> 00:18:00,546 [Narrator] Using radiocarbon dating, 393 00:18:00,546 --> 00:18:03,182 the volcanologists are able to place the first eruption 394 00:18:03,182 --> 00:18:05,651 in the mid to late 13th century, 395 00:18:06,252 --> 00:18:08,020 whereas the subsequent eruptions, 396 00:18:08,020 --> 00:18:11,157 represented by the shallower layers of ash and 397 00:18:11,157 --> 00:18:12,658 volcanic debris, 398 00:18:12,658 --> 00:18:15,261 are placed in the 15th to mid-17th century. 399 00:18:15,494 --> 00:18:17,730 -So we do know roughly when these eruptions 400 00:18:17,730 --> 00:18:19,165 and tsunamis occurred. 401 00:18:19,365 --> 00:18:21,767 But what we don’t know is what happened to all the 402 00:18:21,767 --> 00:18:24,837 people who lived here and experienced those events. 403 00:18:25,838 --> 00:18:28,341 -Despite having experienced hundreds of years 404 00:18:28,341 --> 00:18:29,475 of human activity, 405 00:18:29,475 --> 00:18:32,178 and the fact that the geological record shows that a 406 00:18:32,178 --> 00:18:33,746 tsunami hit the island, 407 00:18:33,746 --> 00:18:36,215 there is nothing in the historical record indicating 408 00:18:36,215 --> 00:18:38,517 that a tsunami devastated the island of Stromboli. 409 00:18:40,119 --> 00:18:43,255 [Narrator] Roughly 150 miles to the north of Stromboli 410 00:18:43,255 --> 00:18:45,925 lies an ancient city that has witnessed many 411 00:18:45,925 --> 00:18:48,294 of the defining historical events of the 412 00:18:48,294 --> 00:18:50,196 last two millennia. 413 00:18:50,196 --> 00:18:52,298 -The port city of Naples is kind of like Stromboli in the 414 00:18:52,298 --> 00:18:54,533 sense that it sits directly beneath a volcano, 415 00:18:55,101 --> 00:18:57,069 this one is Vesuvius, 416 00:18:57,069 --> 00:18:58,971 and you’ve heard of Vesuvius because that’s the 417 00:18:58,971 --> 00:19:01,540 one that blew its lid in 79 AD, 418 00:19:01,540 --> 00:19:04,410 instantly burying the nearby town of Pompeii. 419 00:19:09,048 --> 00:19:11,417 Pompeii didn’t see the light of day again for almost 420 00:19:11,417 --> 00:19:15,454 2,000 years when excavations finally began 421 00:19:15,454 --> 00:19:17,456 around the mid -18th century. 422 00:19:19,191 --> 00:19:21,727 -Petrarch, an Italian poet and the Pope’s ambassador 423 00:19:21,727 --> 00:19:24,030 to Naples wrote of an interesting event 424 00:19:24,030 --> 00:19:26,032 in November 1343. 425 00:19:26,866 --> 00:19:29,935 -He wrote that between November 24 and 25th, 426 00:19:29,935 --> 00:19:32,772 an unprecedented storm devastated large parts of the 427 00:19:32,772 --> 00:19:34,807 city’s port infrastructure. 428 00:19:34,807 --> 00:19:36,809 Not only was its harbor destroyed, 429 00:19:36,809 --> 00:19:38,944 but several others along the Amalfi coast were 430 00:19:38,944 --> 00:19:41,781 laid to waste, hundreds, were killed. 431 00:19:42,715 --> 00:19:45,384 -This places us around the timeline provided 432 00:19:45,384 --> 00:19:46,552 by the charcoal deposits. 433 00:19:46,552 --> 00:19:48,888 And Petrarch refers to a storm, 434 00:19:49,355 --> 00:19:50,890 not a massive tsunami. 435 00:19:50,890 --> 00:19:52,391 There’s a big difference there. 436 00:19:52,391 --> 00:19:53,659 But with that being said, 437 00:19:53,659 --> 00:19:57,063 it would take quite the storm to destroy that much infrastructure 438 00:19:57,063 --> 00:19:58,898 and kill that many people. 439 00:20:01,634 --> 00:20:03,369 [Narrator] Hoping to find more evidence indicating 440 00:20:03,369 --> 00:20:05,905 what may have happened to the people of Stromboli, 441 00:20:06,338 --> 00:20:09,041 the team excavates an area known as San Vincenzo, 442 00:20:09,742 --> 00:20:11,877 not too far from the initial trench. 443 00:20:12,578 --> 00:20:15,181 -Around 10 feet beneath the surface are stone blocks 444 00:20:15,181 --> 00:20:17,583 arranged in a semicircle. 445 00:20:17,583 --> 00:20:20,286 And inside this semi-circle are big flat stones. 446 00:20:21,921 --> 00:20:24,123 -These flat stones have obviously been placed here with 447 00:20:24,123 --> 00:20:26,659 intent and are the remains of what formed a floor. 448 00:20:27,159 --> 00:20:30,262 And this stone semicircle, this is what we call an apse. 449 00:20:31,697 --> 00:20:34,066 -An apse is usually built as a semicircular 450 00:20:34,066 --> 00:20:35,734 extension to a building, 451 00:20:35,734 --> 00:20:37,369 with a dome constructed on top. 452 00:20:37,870 --> 00:20:40,673 The apse is often where you would place an altar. 453 00:20:40,673 --> 00:20:43,275 So what we’re looking at here is actually an old church! 454 00:20:45,311 --> 00:20:47,246 [Narrator] Scattered on the floor of the apse are 455 00:20:47,246 --> 00:20:49,615 tiles that would have covered the church’s roof. 456 00:20:50,082 --> 00:20:53,152 And both inside the apse and surrounding area 457 00:20:53,152 --> 00:20:55,621 there appear to be pits dug into the earth. 458 00:20:56,222 --> 00:20:58,023 -Now things get dramatic. 459 00:20:58,023 --> 00:21:00,926 In these pits are three skeletons! 460 00:21:01,594 --> 00:21:03,896 They’re buried with their heads oriented west and their 461 00:21:03,896 --> 00:21:05,164 legs to the east. 462 00:21:05,164 --> 00:21:07,733 And there’s a collapsed gravestone marks that they’re 463 00:21:07,733 --> 00:21:10,402 lying exactly where they were originally buried. 464 00:21:13,205 --> 00:21:15,474 -But what's important to note here is that the skeletons have 465 00:21:15,474 --> 00:21:17,576 been buried through the tiles. 466 00:21:18,010 --> 00:21:20,846 Meaning that the church roof must have collapsed first, 467 00:21:20,846 --> 00:21:22,581 then the graves were dug and the bodies were 468 00:21:22,581 --> 00:21:24,383 buried immediately after. 469 00:21:24,683 --> 00:21:27,019 -The fact that the tiles were never cleaned up, 470 00:21:27,019 --> 00:21:29,755 also indicates that this was a job that was done with speed in 471 00:21:29,755 --> 00:21:32,691 mind, whoever did it didn't want to be hanging around. 472 00:21:33,526 --> 00:21:36,262 -So it appears that the church suffered a sudden collapse. 473 00:21:36,729 --> 00:21:38,564 People who were killed during the event, 474 00:21:38,564 --> 00:21:40,900 whether they were inside or outside of the building, 475 00:21:40,900 --> 00:21:43,068 were then hastily buried in what remained of the church. 476 00:21:43,636 --> 00:21:45,704 -Radiocarbon dating of the skeletons reveals that 477 00:21:45,704 --> 00:21:47,706 they are from the late 13th to 15th centuries, 478 00:21:48,474 --> 00:21:51,076 also placing them in the timeline of the tsunami that 479 00:21:51,076 --> 00:21:52,978 hit Naples in 1343. 480 00:21:53,979 --> 00:21:55,948 -We don’t have direct evidence indicating that 481 00:21:55,948 --> 00:21:58,317 these people died in the exact year that 482 00:21:58,317 --> 00:22:00,186 Petrarch is talking about when he mentions 483 00:22:00,186 --> 00:22:02,822 that huge storm, but it seems pretty plausible 484 00:22:03,756 --> 00:22:05,457 that these events are connected. 485 00:22:05,691 --> 00:22:08,828 -It’s entirely possible that the volcanic eruption led 486 00:22:08,828 --> 00:22:11,363 immediately to a landslide, which in turn 487 00:22:11,363 --> 00:22:12,665 triggered a tsunami. 488 00:22:13,299 --> 00:22:16,669 So the current theory is that an absolutely massive eruption 489 00:22:16,669 --> 00:22:19,772 on Stromboli in the late 13th century led to the 490 00:22:19,772 --> 00:22:22,308 eventual breaking off of a big section of the 491 00:22:22,308 --> 00:22:23,876 Sciara del Fuoco, 492 00:22:23,876 --> 00:22:26,278 that large trough that we can see today on the 493 00:22:26,278 --> 00:22:28,347 northwest section of the volcano. 494 00:22:29,048 --> 00:22:30,950 -When all this rock hit the water, 495 00:22:30,950 --> 00:22:34,887 it created an enormous tsunami, which very well may have been 496 00:22:34,887 --> 00:22:37,423 what Petrarch described as being a storm that destroyed 497 00:22:37,423 --> 00:22:38,724 the port of Naples. 498 00:22:38,724 --> 00:22:41,026 -The eruption and the tsunami also led to the destruction of 499 00:22:41,026 --> 00:22:43,896 the church and to the deaths of the people who 500 00:22:43,896 --> 00:22:45,064 were buried there. 501 00:22:45,064 --> 00:22:48,167 So you can understand why this probably resulted in most, 502 00:22:48,167 --> 00:22:52,037 if not all, of the island’s residents leaving 503 00:22:52,037 --> 00:22:53,205 for safer places. 504 00:22:55,207 --> 00:22:57,243 -It seems possible that the answer to the mystery 505 00:22:57,243 --> 00:22:59,044 of what devastated the port of Naples and 506 00:22:59,044 --> 00:23:01,680 the Amalfi Coast on that fateful day 507 00:23:01,680 --> 00:23:04,917 in 1343 can now be said to reside in the bowels of 508 00:23:04,917 --> 00:23:06,518 the volcano on Stromboli! 509 00:23:07,586 --> 00:23:10,623 [Narrator] Although much time has passed since this disaster, 510 00:23:10,623 --> 00:23:12,358 the volcano on Stromboli remains as 511 00:23:12,358 --> 00:23:14,126 temperamental as ever, 512 00:23:14,493 --> 00:23:16,829 meaning that not just the residents on the island, 513 00:23:16,829 --> 00:23:20,332 but those of the entire region remain vulnerable to 514 00:23:20,332 --> 00:23:22,167 another large tsunami event. 515 00:23:22,968 --> 00:23:24,236 When that might happen, 516 00:23:24,236 --> 00:23:26,105 only the island of Stromboli knows. 517 00:23:38,851 --> 00:23:41,820 [Narrator] Yonaguni Island, at the southwestern tip of Japan’s 518 00:23:41,820 --> 00:23:45,557 700-mile-long archipelago known as the Ryukyu Islands, 519 00:23:46,058 --> 00:23:48,594 is around 70 miles from Taiwan. 520 00:23:49,094 --> 00:23:51,230 -Yonaguni Island is quite small, 521 00:23:51,230 --> 00:23:53,666 just six miles long. 522 00:23:54,333 --> 00:23:57,036 -It’s also the site of one of the earth’s most intriguing 523 00:23:57,036 --> 00:23:58,404 underwater mysteries. 524 00:23:59,405 --> 00:24:01,807 [Narrator] In 1986, the owner and operator 525 00:24:01,807 --> 00:24:04,810 of a local dive center, Kihachiro Aratake, 526 00:24:04,810 --> 00:24:08,747 is diving around 325 feet off the island’s southern coast, 527 00:24:09,315 --> 00:24:10,716 looking for new places to take 528 00:24:10,716 --> 00:24:12,952 his clients to view hammerhead sharks. 529 00:24:13,319 --> 00:24:15,054 -He can’t believe what he sees. 530 00:24:15,454 --> 00:24:18,123 About 16 feet deep, there’s a massive 531 00:24:18,123 --> 00:24:19,591 underwater rock formation. 532 00:24:20,392 --> 00:24:23,796 It’s so huge that it reminds him of Machu Picchu, 533 00:24:24,263 --> 00:24:26,365 the lost city of the Incas in Peru. 534 00:24:27,800 --> 00:24:29,902 -Moving around the mammoth rock structure, 535 00:24:29,902 --> 00:24:33,572 and swimming along its sides, flat platform-like surfaces and 536 00:24:33,572 --> 00:24:36,375 sharp right-angled corners are clearly visible. 537 00:24:36,742 --> 00:24:38,944 Could they be ancient stone steps? 538 00:24:38,944 --> 00:24:41,313 [Narrator] Photographs are taken, 539 00:24:41,313 --> 00:24:43,749 but the encrusted coral makes it impossible to further 540 00:24:43,749 --> 00:24:46,118 identify the mysterious discovery. 541 00:24:46,552 --> 00:24:49,988 -The story and its accompanying photos make waves 542 00:24:49,988 --> 00:24:53,025 in the Japanese media. 543 00:24:53,025 --> 00:24:56,161 -Some people refer to it as the “Japanese Atlantis.” 544 00:24:56,829 --> 00:24:59,965 But is the structure truly the remains of a 545 00:24:59,965 --> 00:25:02,468 long-lost underwater city or 546 00:25:02,468 --> 00:25:04,803 is it simply a natural rock formation? 547 00:25:05,804 --> 00:25:07,740 [Narrator] The myth of the city of Atlantis, 548 00:25:07,740 --> 00:25:11,877 originating in Plato’s Timaeus in 360 BCE, 549 00:25:11,877 --> 00:25:15,481 tells the legend of a once powerful empire that runs afoul 550 00:25:15,481 --> 00:25:18,484 of the Gods and is cast into the Atlantic Ocean 551 00:25:18,484 --> 00:25:20,519 around 9600 BCE. 552 00:25:20,886 --> 00:25:23,822 -The Pacific counterpart to Atlantis is the mythical 553 00:25:23,822 --> 00:25:26,091 ancient civilization of Mu. 554 00:25:26,425 --> 00:25:29,895 “The Land of Mu” was said to be a thriving continent in the 555 00:25:29,895 --> 00:25:33,565 midst of the Pacific Ocean until a cataclysm broke it into 556 00:25:33,565 --> 00:25:35,901 pieces, sending them crashing into the sea. 557 00:25:37,736 --> 00:25:41,006 -While many academics scoff at the notion of Mu and Atlantis, 558 00:25:41,006 --> 00:25:43,876 new discoveries like the structure off Yonaguni Island 559 00:25:43,876 --> 00:25:47,346 reignite speculation that a remnant of these societies 560 00:25:47,346 --> 00:25:48,947 has come to light. 561 00:25:49,882 --> 00:25:51,750 [Narrator] Professor Masaaki Kimura, 562 00:25:51,750 --> 00:25:54,253 a marine geologist from Ryukyu University 563 00:25:54,253 --> 00:25:55,754 on Okinawa Island, 564 00:25:55,754 --> 00:25:58,056 is inspired by images of the site, 565 00:25:58,056 --> 00:26:00,626 something he presumes to be a natural formation, 566 00:26:01,060 --> 00:26:03,095 and decides to go investigate. 567 00:26:03,328 --> 00:26:06,165 -It’s immense, like this mammoth rectangular pyramid, 568 00:26:06,165 --> 00:26:09,835 an estimated 85 feet tall, 130 yards wide, 569 00:26:10,235 --> 00:26:12,638 and nearly 300 yards long. 570 00:26:13,839 --> 00:26:18,477 -The investigation confirms what appear to be giant steps, 571 00:26:18,477 --> 00:26:21,680 and while some portions are rounded and smooth like you 572 00:26:21,680 --> 00:26:24,283 would expect natural rock formations to be, 573 00:26:24,283 --> 00:26:27,886 there’s also other features that look like flat terraces, 574 00:26:27,886 --> 00:26:30,689 retaining walls, and drainage canals. 575 00:26:31,190 --> 00:26:33,192 -These are fascinating features, 576 00:26:33,192 --> 00:26:36,662 but the biggest observations are scrapes, indentations, 577 00:26:37,162 --> 00:26:40,566 and scuffs on the rock surfaces that look like tool marks. 578 00:26:43,001 --> 00:26:45,037 -If they are tool marks, 579 00:26:45,037 --> 00:26:47,005 it’s evidence of the presence of humans. 580 00:26:47,606 --> 00:26:50,676 Is it possible this was built by an ancient civilization? 581 00:26:51,143 --> 00:26:54,847 If so, could it be a remnant of Mu itself? 582 00:26:57,182 --> 00:26:59,918 [Narrator] Collecting data from dozens of dive expeditions, 583 00:26:59,918 --> 00:27:02,621 Kimura maps out the phenomenal structure and 584 00:27:02,621 --> 00:27:04,523 builds a realistic scale model. 585 00:27:06,492 --> 00:27:08,961 But not everyone believes it’s conclusive evidence 586 00:27:08,961 --> 00:27:10,529 of an ancient civilization. 587 00:27:11,263 --> 00:27:12,464 Robert Schoch, 588 00:27:12,464 --> 00:27:15,267 a professor of Natural Sciences at Boston University, 589 00:27:15,267 --> 00:27:17,469 conducts his own dives at the underwater 590 00:27:17,469 --> 00:27:19,805 structure to draw his own conclusions. 591 00:27:21,773 --> 00:27:24,376 -The thing is that all of the marks that have been cited are 592 00:27:24,376 --> 00:27:28,313 easily classified as scratches made by the erosion process. 593 00:27:29,148 --> 00:27:33,252 There is also no signs that massive rock blocks have been 594 00:27:33,252 --> 00:27:34,686 fitted into position. 595 00:27:35,254 --> 00:27:38,190 -It’s usually pretty obvious. 596 00:27:38,190 --> 00:27:39,358 At the Mayan ruins, 597 00:27:39,358 --> 00:27:42,494 you can see the lines and seams between the huge bricks 598 00:27:42,494 --> 00:27:44,129 and blocks of stone. 599 00:27:44,129 --> 00:27:48,066 But what about its giant steps and the flat terraces? 600 00:27:48,066 --> 00:27:50,669 -If they were steps created by humans, 601 00:27:50,669 --> 00:27:55,174 they’d be at intervals that would allow for easy navigation. 602 00:27:55,474 --> 00:27:57,910 -It’s true. Most of them are feet apart. 603 00:27:57,910 --> 00:27:59,111 You just can’t do it. 604 00:27:59,111 --> 00:28:02,214 So could something natural have formed these features? 605 00:28:03,782 --> 00:28:05,384 [Narrator] Searching for more answers, 606 00:28:05,384 --> 00:28:08,520 rock samples from the formation are collected for study. 607 00:28:08,754 --> 00:28:11,957 They show that its primary composition is sandstone, 608 00:28:11,957 --> 00:28:14,393 dated to 20 million years ago. 609 00:28:14,593 --> 00:28:18,497 -This is a big clue because sandstone of this age breaks 610 00:28:18,497 --> 00:28:21,400 naturally along “horizontal bedding planes.” 611 00:28:21,400 --> 00:28:25,003 Straight edges and angles that look like the flat terraces 612 00:28:25,003 --> 00:28:27,506 present at the formation. 613 00:28:27,506 --> 00:28:30,609 -These same sandstone step-like shapes and terraces 614 00:28:30,609 --> 00:28:34,413 have also been seen on land on Yonaguni Island. 615 00:28:34,680 --> 00:28:37,115 The resemblance is remarkable. 616 00:28:37,115 --> 00:28:40,552 There are also features similar to the supposed retaining walls 617 00:28:40,552 --> 00:28:42,754 and drainage canals on the formation. 618 00:28:44,923 --> 00:28:46,391 [Narrator] After his analysis, 619 00:28:46,391 --> 00:28:48,293 Schoch’s conclusion that the structure is a 620 00:28:48,293 --> 00:28:51,663 natural formation fractures the scientific community 621 00:28:51,663 --> 00:28:53,031 into two camps. 622 00:28:53,832 --> 00:28:56,301 -The natural formation camp claims that there are 623 00:28:56,301 --> 00:28:59,538 simply no verifiable signs that it has been constructed. 624 00:28:59,972 --> 00:29:03,175 So, is the structure now known as the Yonaguni Monument 625 00:29:03,175 --> 00:29:06,445 made by humans or is it a natural formation? 626 00:29:08,246 --> 00:29:11,149 -Now this debate might seem academic, but it matters! 627 00:29:11,149 --> 00:29:13,452 Because of the contradicting evidence, 628 00:29:13,452 --> 00:29:16,388 the Japanese government refuses to recognize this monument 629 00:29:16,388 --> 00:29:18,523 as a cultural property of Japan. 630 00:29:18,991 --> 00:29:22,461 That means no research and no preservation. 631 00:29:24,730 --> 00:29:26,732 Meanwhile the debate rages on. 632 00:29:29,835 --> 00:29:32,504 [Narrator] Professor Kimura continues his mission to prove 633 00:29:32,504 --> 00:29:35,374 the monument was created by an ancient civilization. 634 00:29:36,074 --> 00:29:39,478 -Further study at the monument reveals a smooth area at its 635 00:29:39,478 --> 00:29:43,048 base over six yards wide which nearly surrounds 636 00:29:43,048 --> 00:29:45,384 the entire formation. 637 00:29:45,384 --> 00:29:48,220 Labeled the “Loop Road,” the ocean floor looks like it has 638 00:29:48,220 --> 00:29:50,188 been swept clear here. 639 00:29:50,722 --> 00:29:54,159 -This is important because if the Loop Road had been formed 640 00:29:54,159 --> 00:29:57,929 naturally by erosion, you’d see rock fragments as heavy as 641 00:29:57,929 --> 00:30:00,032 ten tons all over the place. 642 00:30:00,399 --> 00:30:02,768 And the current definitely wouldn’t be powerful enough to 643 00:30:02,768 --> 00:30:04,569 carry all that rubble away. 644 00:30:05,504 --> 00:30:09,775 -There are also similarly wide and long cleared pathways on 645 00:30:09,775 --> 00:30:13,378 the ocean floor between the main structure and the other 646 00:30:13,378 --> 00:30:15,347 smaller structures nearby. 647 00:30:15,547 --> 00:30:17,516 These are labeled streets. 648 00:30:18,650 --> 00:30:21,787 -Then, geologists find what look like post holes in the 649 00:30:21,787 --> 00:30:24,589 monument plus a suspected gate, 650 00:30:26,024 --> 00:30:27,993 a tunnel opening about three feet wide 651 00:30:27,993 --> 00:30:29,728 and six and a half feet high 652 00:30:29,728 --> 00:30:31,296 leading out to the Loop Road. 653 00:30:33,665 --> 00:30:36,168 [Narrator] Excited by these new developments and discoveries, 654 00:30:36,635 --> 00:30:39,771 the team looks to other known megalithic sites for answers. 655 00:30:40,238 --> 00:30:42,974 In Okinawa, stone structures dating back to 656 00:30:42,974 --> 00:30:45,610 between 10,000 and 20,000 years ago, 657 00:30:45,610 --> 00:30:48,980 may offer clues as to the Yonaguni Monument’s time period. 658 00:30:49,981 --> 00:30:53,085 -When compared to the monument’s terraces and walls, 659 00:30:53,085 --> 00:30:55,754 there are structural similarities and nearly 660 00:30:55,754 --> 00:30:57,989 identical surface weathering. 661 00:30:57,989 --> 00:31:02,594 So does it mean the monument is also at least 10,000 years old 662 00:31:02,594 --> 00:31:04,596 and if so, how was it submerged? 663 00:31:06,331 --> 00:31:09,601 -Archaeological studies cite glacial periods as a source for 664 00:31:09,601 --> 00:31:11,737 much of the change in the land masses on Earth. 665 00:31:12,170 --> 00:31:15,907 The last glacial period was, significantly, 10,000 years ago. 666 00:31:16,742 --> 00:31:18,710 As the climate around the world warmed, 667 00:31:18,710 --> 00:31:21,613 it resulted in melting ice and rising oceans. 668 00:31:21,613 --> 00:31:23,682 Of course, this would have happened in the seas 669 00:31:23,682 --> 00:31:25,751 surrounding Yonaguni Island as well. 670 00:31:26,718 --> 00:31:29,755 [Narrator] Kimura now believes he has the evidence to conclude 671 00:31:29,755 --> 00:31:33,258 that the Yonaguni Monument was a ceremonial structure built by 672 00:31:33,258 --> 00:31:36,461 an ancient civilization around 10,000 years ago. 673 00:31:37,229 --> 00:31:40,866 However, once again, his theory is hotly debated. 674 00:31:41,533 --> 00:31:44,136 -Monumental architecture is typically only found in 675 00:31:44,136 --> 00:31:45,937 agricultural societies. 676 00:31:45,937 --> 00:31:49,775 Farming didn’t even begin in Japan until the latter stages 677 00:31:49,775 --> 00:31:53,111 of the Jomon Period, 3000 years ago, 678 00:31:53,111 --> 00:31:55,547 when Japan started cultivating rice. 679 00:31:55,547 --> 00:31:58,850 -Another possible factor here is a phenomena called 680 00:31:58,850 --> 00:32:03,054 pareidolia, where the human eye sees shapes in otherwise 681 00:32:03,054 --> 00:32:07,092 everyday objects, things like clouds, and yes, 682 00:32:07,092 --> 00:32:08,593 rock formations. 683 00:32:09,494 --> 00:32:12,531 -It’s worth noting, however, that Kimura’s critics haven’t 684 00:32:12,531 --> 00:32:15,867 dedicated their life to the monument’s study like he has. 685 00:32:16,668 --> 00:32:20,539 They review the data for a few weeks, days, or even hours. 686 00:32:20,539 --> 00:32:23,742 He has studied the monument for decades. 687 00:32:26,511 --> 00:32:28,980 -Kimura now believes the Yonaguni Monument and its 688 00:32:28,980 --> 00:32:32,684 related structures were catapulted into the sea by a 689 00:32:32,684 --> 00:32:35,754 massive earthquake 2000 years ago, 690 00:32:35,754 --> 00:32:38,590 with their origin dating back around 5000 years. 691 00:32:39,324 --> 00:32:42,294 Could this finally be enough evidence to put the human-made 692 00:32:42,294 --> 00:32:44,729 or natural formation debate to rest? 693 00:32:45,630 --> 00:32:48,166 [Narrator] Nearly 40 years after its discovery, 694 00:32:48,166 --> 00:32:50,969 the Yonaguni monument continues to fascinate divers and 695 00:32:50,969 --> 00:32:53,138 scientists from all over the world. 696 00:32:53,405 --> 00:32:56,374 Perhaps one day someone will actually solve the murky 697 00:32:56,374 --> 00:33:00,545 mystery of its origin, until then, happy diving. 698 00:33:15,093 --> 00:33:18,096 Wrapped in the blue-green waters of the Caribbean Sea is 699 00:33:18,096 --> 00:33:20,332 the archipelago of Islas Rosario, 700 00:33:20,899 --> 00:33:24,236 27 small islands just southwest of the coastal city of 701 00:33:24,236 --> 00:33:25,837 Cartagena, Colombia. 702 00:33:27,606 --> 00:33:30,675 -Given its location, it's to be expected that these islands are 703 00:33:30,675 --> 00:33:32,677 gorgeous, filled with sandy beaches, 704 00:33:33,111 --> 00:33:35,447 crystalline waters and beautiful coral reefs. 705 00:33:37,916 --> 00:33:39,784 [Narrator] Isla Grande is the jewel of this 706 00:33:39,784 --> 00:33:41,620 cluster of islands. 707 00:33:41,620 --> 00:33:44,089 As the name suggests, it’s the largest of them and 708 00:33:44,089 --> 00:33:46,391 one of the most beautiful. 709 00:33:46,591 --> 00:33:49,628 One of its biggest draws is Laguna Encantada, 710 00:33:49,628 --> 00:33:51,162 the enchanted lagoon 711 00:33:51,663 --> 00:33:53,565 -If you go to the lagoon during the day, 712 00:33:53,565 --> 00:33:55,967 it’s a magical place to swim or just hang out. 713 00:33:56,434 --> 00:33:58,069 But if you go at night, 714 00:33:58,069 --> 00:34:00,105 it has a completely different vibe, 715 00:34:00,105 --> 00:34:02,340 it’s both beautiful and unnerving, 716 00:34:02,574 --> 00:34:04,910 the water, it glows. 717 00:34:07,145 --> 00:34:09,381 -While the blue-green light that fills the lagoon 718 00:34:09,381 --> 00:34:13,451 may feel mystical, it’s actually luminescent plankton or algae 719 00:34:13,985 --> 00:34:16,554 that has molecules called luciferins that help 720 00:34:16,554 --> 00:34:18,290 it light up. 721 00:34:18,757 --> 00:34:21,760 [Narrator] The glowing algae makes this place feel magical. 722 00:34:22,227 --> 00:34:25,063 but it’s definitely not the only mysterious thing 723 00:34:25,063 --> 00:34:26,665 about this island. 724 00:34:26,965 --> 00:34:29,601 -Because it’s known as a snorkeler's paradise, 725 00:34:29,601 --> 00:34:32,904 many visitors head out to the water with masks and fins, 726 00:34:33,471 --> 00:34:36,074 but once they get under the surface, 727 00:34:36,074 --> 00:34:38,643 they might see a lot more than coral. 728 00:34:39,444 --> 00:34:43,181 -Just off the island about 20 feet down is something that you 729 00:34:43,181 --> 00:34:45,317 just won't find in most tourist locales. 730 00:34:46,217 --> 00:34:48,987 It’s hard to see what it is from the surface. 731 00:34:48,987 --> 00:34:51,456 But it’s large and seemingly made of metal. 732 00:34:51,456 --> 00:34:52,757 What is it? 733 00:34:55,460 --> 00:34:58,930 -When you get close you can see that it’s a small plane. 734 00:35:00,465 --> 00:35:02,667 There’s not even an airport here. 735 00:35:02,667 --> 00:35:05,503 You have to take a boat or ferry from the mainland 736 00:35:05,503 --> 00:35:07,405 to get here. 737 00:35:07,872 --> 00:35:10,308 [Narrator] The answer may lie several miles away on 738 00:35:10,308 --> 00:35:12,210 the west side of the island, 739 00:35:12,210 --> 00:35:14,245 through dense and sweltering jungle. 740 00:35:14,479 --> 00:35:17,148 -This is not a place you can navigate to with Google Maps, 741 00:35:17,148 --> 00:35:18,750 and it’s no easy journey. 742 00:35:18,750 --> 00:35:20,452 You have to hike through the jungle, 743 00:35:20,452 --> 00:35:21,953 then take a canoe through swamps, 744 00:35:21,953 --> 00:35:25,090 then hike again to get a glimpse of the thing that might 745 00:35:25,090 --> 00:35:27,692 explain the plane at the bottom of the sea. 746 00:35:29,628 --> 00:35:31,796 -As you get closer to what appears to be some kind of 747 00:35:31,796 --> 00:35:33,898 complex, you'll find yourself on a tiled pathway. 748 00:35:36,501 --> 00:35:38,336 It's oddly beautiful and kind of eerie. 749 00:35:40,205 --> 00:35:42,574 [Narrator] The buildings themselves aren’t unusual. 750 00:35:42,574 --> 00:35:45,543 The island does have about 800 residents. 751 00:35:45,543 --> 00:35:47,746 But this is no ordinary home. 752 00:35:48,313 --> 00:35:52,484 -The interior is decorated with beautiful tile and marble with 753 00:35:52,484 --> 00:35:54,219 faded pastel walls. 754 00:35:55,353 --> 00:35:58,757 -Beyond the lobby is a large courtyard with an abandoned 755 00:35:58,757 --> 00:36:01,026 pool and a series of decaying chalets. 756 00:36:03,461 --> 00:36:05,797 The area is filled with animal droppings, 757 00:36:06,164 --> 00:36:08,166 specifically pig droppings. 758 00:36:08,700 --> 00:36:13,138 It’s a jarring juxtaposition, a grand and extravagant cluster 759 00:36:13,138 --> 00:36:17,709 of buildings with giant wild pigs as the only residents. 760 00:36:20,045 --> 00:36:22,180 -But who would have built and abandoned a 761 00:36:22,180 --> 00:36:24,315 huge mansion complex, 762 00:36:24,315 --> 00:36:26,551 and how does it connect to the sunken plane? 763 00:36:29,354 --> 00:36:33,091 The answer could possibly be traced back to the ‘80s, 764 00:36:33,091 --> 00:36:34,859 and the power of a plant. 765 00:36:35,927 --> 00:36:39,097 [Narrator] Colombia has faced many challenges over the years, 766 00:36:39,497 --> 00:36:42,734 from colonization and civil war to cocaine. 767 00:36:43,401 --> 00:36:45,904 -It’s the world's leading producer of coca, 768 00:36:45,904 --> 00:36:47,839 the plant from which cocaine is made. 769 00:36:48,740 --> 00:36:51,376 While this country has a rich and vibrant culture, 770 00:36:51,376 --> 00:36:53,545 most of the world knows it for its drug cartels, 771 00:36:53,945 --> 00:36:56,014 and how they essentially ruled the country in the late 772 00:36:56,014 --> 00:36:57,482 ‘70s and ‘80s. 773 00:36:58,616 --> 00:37:01,252 [Narrator] For five decades, Colombia was known for 774 00:37:01,252 --> 00:37:04,422 assassinations, kidnappings, and widespread violence. 775 00:37:05,790 --> 00:37:07,892 Between the drug trade and the civil war, 776 00:37:07,892 --> 00:37:10,962 hundreds of thousands of people lost their lives. 777 00:37:11,896 --> 00:37:15,433 -Back in the day, small planes were the lifeblood of cocaine 778 00:37:15,433 --> 00:37:18,369 operations in the country, allowing the cartels to move 779 00:37:18,369 --> 00:37:21,206 drugs by literally flying under the radar. 780 00:37:23,775 --> 00:37:26,744 -So this downed plane off of Isla Grande might be a drug 781 00:37:26,744 --> 00:37:29,647 plane that the Colombian government seized from 782 00:37:29,647 --> 00:37:32,050 imprisoned dealers, 783 00:37:32,817 --> 00:37:35,987 planes that were then used to create artificial reefs. 784 00:37:46,364 --> 00:37:48,867 -Some People believe that the plane crashed after taking off 785 00:37:48,867 --> 00:37:50,535 from the mysterious complex. 786 00:37:50,535 --> 00:37:53,338 It makes sense if the place was owned by a drug lord, 787 00:37:53,338 --> 00:37:56,040 maybe even the most famous of all, 788 00:37:57,008 --> 00:37:59,010 Pablo Escobar. 789 00:38:02,046 --> 00:38:04,249 [Narrator] Escobar wasn’t just the richest drug lord in 790 00:38:04,249 --> 00:38:07,218 Colombia, he was one of the richest men in the world! 791 00:38:08,520 --> 00:38:11,790 He was actually on Forbes’ Billionaires list for seven 792 00:38:11,790 --> 00:38:13,958 years in a row. 793 00:38:13,958 --> 00:38:18,730 -It’s said that at its peak his empire was bringing in $420 794 00:38:18,730 --> 00:38:25,036 million US a week and that they spent $2500 a month on rubber 795 00:38:25,270 --> 00:38:28,439 bands just to hold their money together. 796 00:38:28,439 --> 00:38:30,241 -It’s not just his bank account that boasted 797 00:38:30,241 --> 00:38:32,744 staggering numbers, it’s also his body count. 798 00:38:33,444 --> 00:38:35,747 Escobar is said to have been involved directly or 799 00:38:35,747 --> 00:38:38,816 indirectly, in the deaths of up to 10,000 people. 800 00:38:39,517 --> 00:38:42,654 That’s a dozen times the population of the entire island! 801 00:38:44,522 --> 00:38:47,692 [James Ellis] Surprisingly, this violent and ruthless narco 802 00:38:47,692 --> 00:38:49,527 was also a canny businessman. 803 00:38:49,527 --> 00:38:52,163 One of the ways Pablo hid the proceeds from his illicit 804 00:38:52,163 --> 00:38:55,600 empire was to invest in art and high-end properties, 805 00:38:55,867 --> 00:38:57,569 just like this one. 806 00:39:00,038 --> 00:39:02,974 [Narrator] The complex was Pablo’s prized party mansion 807 00:39:02,974 --> 00:39:06,211 and in its prime featured about 300 guest rooms, 808 00:39:07,445 --> 00:39:10,381 a massive swimming pool and party deck, 809 00:39:10,381 --> 00:39:13,184 and even a private helicopter landing pad. 810 00:39:14,419 --> 00:39:15,753 -With a building like this, 811 00:39:15,753 --> 00:39:17,922 you can imagine that the insides would be as 812 00:39:17,922 --> 00:39:19,724 excessive as the outside. 813 00:39:19,924 --> 00:39:22,894 According to lore, some of the bathrooms were tricked out 814 00:39:22,894 --> 00:39:26,798 with gold shower heads, not golden, solid gold. 815 00:39:29,033 --> 00:39:31,636 Escobar was not a man known for restraint. 816 00:39:36,674 --> 00:39:38,876 [Narrator] The remains of Escobar’s secret getaway serve 817 00:39:38,876 --> 00:39:41,679 as a sobering emblem of what happened to the man himself. 818 00:39:42,547 --> 00:39:45,250 After members of his own operation betrayed him, 819 00:39:45,250 --> 00:39:48,386 he was gunned down in 1993, and after his death, 820 00:39:48,886 --> 00:39:52,323 the government of Colombia expropriated his wealth. 821 00:39:52,890 --> 00:39:56,261 The mysteries held within this island mansion will continue to 822 00:39:56,261 --> 00:39:59,264 attract the attention of those near and far. 823 00:39:59,931 --> 00:40:09,908 Captioned by Cotter Media Group. 67439

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